Hymenaea stigonocarpa has twenty four
chromosomes (2n=24). It is a low to medium height
deciduous tree of and a diameter of up to at breast height. It has a twisted trunk covered by a thick rough grey bark and reddish-brown twigs. Its leaves are alternately set, and consist of two leathery, kidney-shaped to ovate
leaflets of long and wide, with quickly falling
bracts (so-called
stipules) at their base. The flowers of this species are the largest in the genus, and the
petals are somewhat larger than the
sepals. The five sepals are thick and are deflected when the flowers have opened. The five white
petals are approximately long and wide and are set on the edge of a broad
hypanthium. Ten free, white, long filaments are tipped by long anthers. In the middle of the hypanthium is a single, fleshy
carpel on a short, long stalk, which is tipped by a long curved white
style implanted at an angle, with a bud-shaped wet grainy stigma at the tip. Up to thirty flowers are set in inflorescences at the tip of the branches, subtended by bracts. The species depends on
cross-pollination and is pollinated mainly by bats. Self-fertilised flowers are aborted after a week. The ripe fruit is light to dark brown with small and regularly spaced light glands, dry,
indehiscent, leathery
legume of long, wide and thick, with a rounded base, a slightly pointed tip, and a straight or wavy margin. The
mesocarp and
endocarp have been transformed into yellowish, soft, fibrous, slightly sweet
flour-rich pulp with a characteristic smell. A prominent suture line surrounds the entire legume. Fruits are ripe between April and July in the
Federal District, July to November in
Mato Grosso do Sul and August in
Minas Gerais. It contains one to six seeds. These seeds are redish-brown, oval, side-ways compressed, long and thick, with rounded tip and base, an irregular surface and some depressions. Overly ripe fruits emit an unpleasant smell. == Ecology ==